So calling for resistance to oppression is "antisemitic" when the oppressors happen to be Jewish?bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 3:09 pmOn the other hand, you get students chanting ‘burn Tel Aviv to the ground’, or the protest organiser who said ‘Zionists don’t deserve to live’. (And we all know who they mean by ‘Zionists’: the linked article makes it quite clear that they mean ‘anyone who is identifiably Jewish’.) Even in my own city of Sydney, we’ve seen young kids encouraged to call for ‘intifada’. Maybe, luckily, there was no antisemitism that you saw, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t simmering beneath the surface.
The administration just announced that it had come to an agreement with the protesters which would require it to fully disclose its investments in return for dismantling the encampment. I personally went outside to hear the reaction from the students. One of them addressed the crowd over a loudspeaker, saying:
So, yeah, absolutely brimming with barely-suppressed antisemitism.This encampment right here is about love and community and support. Myself, as a Jewish student had never felt so supported, so loved, so carried in my strength, so strong in my faith as I do here in the NU liberation zone.
(BTW, she also announced that the University had met a demand for a place for Jewish students to meet that wasn't as "notoriously Zionist" [her exact words] as Hillel House.)